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Portland (shipwreck) facts for kids

Kids Encyclopedia Facts
Painting of steamship from the side showing the whole ship as it steams with flags hoisted and three decks populated with riders.
PS Portland at sea, by Antonio Jacobsen.
History
Name PS Portland
Namesake Portland, Maine
Owner
  • Portland Steam Packet Co.
  • (later the Portland Steamship Co.)
Route Atlantic Ocean between Portland, Maine and Boston, Massachusetts
Builder New England Shipbuilding Co., Bath, Maine
Cost $250,000
Launched October 14, 1889
Homeport Portland, Maine
Fate Sank on 27 November 1898, during the Portland Gale
General characteristics
Type Passenger paddle steamship
Tonnage
  • 2,284 GT;
  • 1,517 net tonnage (NT)
Length
Beam
  • 42 ft (13 m) hull;
  • 68 ft (21 m) across wheel guards
Draft 10 ft (3.0 m)
Depth of hold 15 ft 6 in (4.72 m)
Decks Three
Installed power (1) 62-inch-bore (1.6 m), 12-foot-stroke (3.7 m), 1,200-horsepower vertical-beam steam engine with (2) boilers
Propulsion (2) 35-foot-diameter (11 m) paddlewheels; each having (26) paddle buckets, 8 ft × 2 ft (2.4 m × 0.6 m), dipping 4 ft (1.2 m).
Speed 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph)
Capacity 156 staterooms accommodating 700 passengers; 400 tons freight
Crew 63
PORTLAND (Shipwreck and Remains)
SS Portland.jpg
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Nearest city Gloucester, Massachusetts
NRHP reference No. 04001473
Added to NRHP January 13, 2005

PS Portland was a large side-wheel paddle steamer, an ocean-going steamship with side-mounted paddlewheels. She was built in 1889 for passenger service between Boston, Massachusetts, and Portland, Maine. She is best known as the namesake of the infamous Portland Gale of 1898, a massive blizzard that struck coastal New England, claiming the lives of over 400 people and more than 150 vessels.

Construction and design

Portland's wooden hull was built by the New England Company in Bath, Maine. The 1200-horsepower vertical-beam steam engine was constructed by the Portland Company, with a bore, or cylinder diameter, measuring 5 ft 2 in (1.57 m) across, together with a 12 ft (3.7 m) stroke. The ship's two iron boilers were constructed at the Bath Iron Works, also in Bath, Maine.

Portland was built for the Portland Steam Packet Company (later renamed Portland Steamship Company), at a cost of $250,000, to provide overnight passenger service between Boston and Portland. She was one of New England's largest and most luxurious paddle steamers in existence at the time, and after nine years' solid performance, she had earned a reputation as a safe and dependable vessel.

Final voyage and sinking

On November 27, 1898, Portland, having departed Boston earlier, was en route to Portland, Maine, following her traditional route. Unbeknownst to the crew, a powerful storm system was quickly traveling north, and Portland, despite her reputation as a remarkably safe vessel, was ill-equipped to handle such extreme conditions.

At some point during the storm, Portland sank off of Cape Ann with all hands, the exact number of which cannot be determined, as the only known passenger list went down with the ship. Initial newspaper accounts at the time estimated the loss as from 99 to 118 persons. The bodies of only 16 crew and 35 passengers were ever recovered, but present-day estimates are that the Portland was carrying, in total, from 193 to 245 persons, including 63 crew.

Her loss represented New England's greatest steamship disaster prior to the year 1900.

Shipwreck

The shipwreck is lying 460 feet (140 m) below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean near Gloucester, Massachusetts, at an undisclosed location within the federally-protected Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary. The site was first located in 1989 by John Fish and Arnold Carr of American Underwater Search and Survey. The find was confirmed in 2002 by a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration expedition that used ROV's to photograph the wreck. The wreck was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.

Divers explore The Portland wreckage

Portland (sidewheeler 1890)
Portland, drawn in 1895 by Samuel Ward Stanton, who died on the Titanic.

In 2008, five Massachusetts scuba divers became the first to reach the steamship, also known as the "Titanic of New England". The divers made three successful dives, and reported that the wreck was strewn with artifacts, like stacks of dishes, mugs, wash basins and toilets, but no human remains. They did not, however, explore below the deck because of the danger. Because of the depth of the wreck site, they reported that some of their dive lights imploded, and they could only explore the site for 10–15 minutes before needing to return to the surface. The divers "were unable to retrieve artifacts" due to rules in place at the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary.

Portland (sidewheeler 1890) 02
Another drawing of Portland by Samuel Ward Stanton.

Purported site visit during WWII

An earlier claim of locating and reportedly visiting the wreck of the Portland arose from the last week of June 1945. A dive commissioned by noted author Edward Rowe Snow (who is also known as the Lighthouse Santa) supposedly occurred during the last week of June through the first week of July during the last year of the war. Snow supposedly recorded the affidavit of diver Al George, from Malden, Massachusetts, in pages 178-180 of his book Strange Tales from Nova Scotia to Cape Hatteras. According to the affidavit, George found the site by traveling to a location discovered by Captain Charles G. Carver of Rockland, Maine. The site is roughly identified as follows: "Highland Light bears 175 degrees true at a distance of 4.5 miles; the Pilgrim Monument, 6.25 miles away has a bearing of 210 degrees; Race Point Coast Guard Station, bearing 255 degrees, is seven miles distant."

According to diver George, recovery of artifacts would be cost-prohibitive, and nearly impossible given the status of the wreck. Even acknowledging the likely presence of uncut diamonds in the purser's safe, George assessed the chances of recovery as a losing financial proposition, based in part on how deeply entrenched in the sand the wreck was, and how widely dispersed the impact with the bottom had spread bits and pieces of the ship.

In light of more recent discovery, the accuracy of this entire account is highly questionable.